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https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2020.10.136
Title: | Core Domains for Research on Hospital Inactivity in Acutely Ill Older Adults: A Delphi Consensus Study | Authors: | Baldwin, Claire E Phillips, Anna C Edney, Sarah M Lewis, Lucy K |
Keywords: | Science & Technology Life Sciences & Biomedicine Rehabilitation Sport Sciences Acute disease Consensus Exercise Frail elderly Hospitalization Outcome assessment Health care Patient reported outcome measures Sedentary behavior SEDENTARY BEHAVIOR PHYSICAL-ACTIVITY MOBILITY CARE ACCELEROMETRY INTERVENTION INPATIENTS PROGRAM ELDERS FRAIL |
Issue Date: | 31-Mar-2021 | Publisher: | W B SAUNDERS CO-ELSEVIER INC | Citation: | Baldwin, Claire E, Phillips, Anna C, Edney, Sarah M, Lewis, Lucy K (2021-03-31). Core Domains for Research on Hospital Inactivity in Acutely Ill Older Adults: A Delphi Consensus Study. ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION 102 (4) : 664-674. ScholarBank@NUS Repository. https://doi.org/10.1016/j.apmr.2020.10.136 | Abstract: | Objective: To identify core domains for research studies of physical activity and sedentary behavior during hospitalization for older adults with an acute medical illness. Design: A 4-Round Delphi consensus process. Round 1 invited responses to open-ended questions to generate items for the core domains research. In rounds 2-4, participants were invited to use a Likert scale (1-9) to rate the importance of each core domain for research studies of physical activity and/or sedentary behavior in hospitalized older adults with an acute medical illness. Setting: Online surveys. Participants: A total of 49 participants were invited to each round (international researchers, clinicians, policy makers and patients). Response rates across rounds 1-4 were 94%, 88%, 83% and 81%, respectively. Interventions: None. Main Outcome Measures: Consensus was defined a priori as ≥70% of respondents rating an item as “critical” (score≥7) and ≤15% of respondents rating an item as “not important” (score≤3). Results: In round 2, a total of 9 of 25 core domains reached consensus agreement (physical functioning, general, role functioning, emotional functioning, global quality of life, hospital, psychiatric, cognitive functioning, carer burden). In round 3, an additional 8 reached consensus (adverse events, perceived health status, musculoskeletal, social functioning, vascular, cardiac, mortality, economic). Round 4 participants provided further review and a final rating of all 17 core domains that met consensus in previous rounds. Four core domains were rated as “critically important” to evaluate: physical functioning, social functioning, emotional functioning, and hospital outcomes. Conclusions: This preliminary work provides international and expert consensus-based core domains for development toward a core-outcome set for research, with the ultimate goal of fostering consistency in outcomes and reporting to accelerate research on effective strategies to address physical activity and/or sedentary behavior in older adults while hospitalized. | Source Title: | ARCHIVES OF PHYSICAL MEDICINE AND REHABILITATION | URI: | https://scholarbank.nus.edu.sg/handle/10635/226692 | ISSN: | 00039993 1532821X |
DOI: | 10.1016/j.apmr.2020.10.136 |
Appears in Collections: | Staff Publications Elements |
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Baldwin et al. 2020 Arch Phy Med Reh - core research domains hospitalised older adults Delphi.pdf | 395.79 kB | Adobe PDF | CLOSED | None |
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